01.04
North Georgia and much of the south were hit with heavy rains during Christmas week, resulting in widespread floods on Christmas Day and the following weekend.
Many roadways in Walker, like Lake Howard Rd and Arnold Ln above, flooded and were (or should have been) closed.
Despite many examples of dumb “hero” antics (as seen in the video), nobody in Walker County died or sustained serious injury in the deluge. Chattooga County, however, lost one resident: George Paul Treadaway of Summerville, who died trying to drive down a flooded road in Gordon County.
Property damage includes the wooden bridge on Campbell Trail near Caboose Park behind Goodwill. Fortunately in LaFayette, most of the damage involved power outages and disrupted plans – not homes and businesses as we saw in 2009.
During the Christmas floods Walker County residents had to basically guess what roads would flood and what routes might be safe for travel, because the county released no list of road conditions for three days.
Chattooga and Catoosa emergency management officials updated media several times daily with lists of roads that were closed or closing. By comparison, Walker County’s official statement to media on December 26th was the super helpful “Numerous roads closed.”
Sources inside county government blame 911 director and Emergency Management Coordinator David Ashburn [depicted] for the lack of clear information and instruction, saying he was on vacation the entire time – along with his assistant, Curtis Creekmur, who he’s raised as a son. (Ashburn’s son Eric, a fire chief, was also thought to have gone with them.)
Nobody’s saying people can’t take vacation. Ashburn has been a county employee for over twenty years and he’s not in good health, he should have time off occasionally. But when you give those juicy high-paying leadership jobs to your family, somebody still has to stay behind and be in charge on holidays.
When every key emergency response role is held by a family member, you can’t go take vacations together.
Rescue teams from Walker, Dade, and Hamilton counties spent about 12 hours on Friday night and Saturday morning (January 1 & 2) extracting a 50-year-old man from a cave in the Rising Fawn area of Dade County.
He’s thought to have fallen about 15 feet inside Byers Cave, sustaining a head injury. The Atlanta native, described as an experienced caver, was hospitalized and listed in critical condition as of Sunday.
Read More >>